IRS Targeting More Supposedly 'High-Income' Americans Than Advertised
Don’t count on that promise to not hike taxes on “people making less than $400,000.”

Earlier this month, the IRS announced a new focus on squeezing "high-income earners" as part of a "historic effort to restore fairness in tax compliance." I'm not inclined to put the word "fairness" or any other positive sentiments in proximity to "tax compliance," however the announcement aligns with a Biden administration vow to target those making more than $400,000 per year. But according to the tax inspector general, the IRS's cutoff for "high-income" is half that of the White House's, meaning the tax man's scrutiny is likely to sweep farther and wider than we've been told.
Should Only 'High-Income Earners' Be Afraid?
"Capitalizing on Inflation Reduction Act funding and following a top-to-bottom review of enforcement efforts, the Internal Revenue Service announced today the start of a sweeping, historic effort to restore fairness in tax compliance by shifting more attention onto high-income earners, partnerships, large corporations and promoters abusing the nation's tax laws," according to a September 8 IRS press release.
The move was expected given that the White House promised in March "to improve tax compliance by finally cracking down on high-income individuals." In February, President Joe Biden himself insisted "that people making less than $400,000 a year will not see a single penny increase in taxes."
As you may remember, last year the tax agency was gifted an $80 billion budget infusion to ensure that it would have enough enforcers to paw through seat cushions and tighten thumbscrews in anticipation of this new emphasis on satisfying the government's insatiable appetite. However, there's good reason to believe the IRS's "high-income" attention will fall on more Americans than promised.
The Definition of 'High-Income' Is a Little Slippery
"The IRS does not have a unified or updated definition for individual high-income taxpayers," the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) warned in a report on August 31. "The IRS's current default definition of high-income taxpayers is $200,000 and above."
"The Tax Reform Act of 1976 required annual publication of data on individual income tax returns reporting income of $200,000 or more," TIGTA notes, and was formally set as the benchmark for "high-income taxpayers" in 2005. It hasn't budged since, leaving everybody earning between $200,000 and $1,000,000 in the same IRS income category.
"The current examination coding scheme uses $200,000 as a main threshold even though it is no longer a reasonable standard for high earners given inflation since 2005," TIGTA adds. "For example, there is no way to identify the complete population of taxpayers that meet the criterion of $400,000 or more specified by the current Treasury Secretary."
The report recommends the definition of "high-income" be revised so that the term means the same thing to IRS agents as it does in press releases from the Department of the Treasury and the White House. "At a minimum, the IRS should accept the Treasury Secretary's $400,000 directive as the new high-income floor on which IRS leadership can focus enforcement efforts."
Would it surprise you to hear that the IRS refused?
The IRS Really Likes Slippery Definitions
"We do not agree," responded Douglas W. O'Donnell, IRS deputy commissioner for services and enforcement, in an August 14, 2023, memo attached to the report. "In accordance with the Treasury Secretary's directive, the IRS will focus on high-income high-wealth individuals, large corporations and complex partnerships that present a high risk of noncompliance while at the same time not increasing audit rates above historic levels for households making less than $400,000 and small businesses.…However, a static and overly proscriptive definition of high-income taxpayers for purposes of focusing on income levels above which taxpayers have unique and varied opportunities for tax would serve to deprive the IRS of the agility to address emerging issues and trends."
That's a lot of words to say that tax collectors want to continue using the phrase "high-income" in as slippery a way as they please without being pinned to any specific definition. Who is a "high-income earner"? Maybe somebody earning over $400,000, or maybe you if it's your lucky day.
You might notice, also, that the IRS promises only to not increase "audit rates above historic levels" for households earning less than $400,000. That's the same commitment found in Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen's August 10, 2022, directive to the IRS, and in the IRS's September 8 press release. A promise to maintain the recent rate of audits on those making less than the income cutoff is not the same as "people making less than $400,000 a year will not see a single penny increase in taxes." It's just an assurance that one particular tool for tax extraction won't be relied upon by the thousands of new agents the IRS plans to hire.
Maybe You Should Be Afraid After All
There aren't enough wealthy people to justify all of that attention. It's the millions of middle-class Americans who are juicy targets for a "historic effort to restore fairness in tax compliance."
"The main targets will by necessity be the middle- and upper-middle class because that's where the money is," The Wall Street Journal editorial board cautioned last year when the massive boost in IRS funding was being debated by lawmakers. "The Joint Committee on Taxation, Congress's official tax scorekeeper, says that from 78% to 90% of the money raised from under-reported income would likely come from those making less than $200,000 a year. Only 4% to 9% would come from those making more than $500,000."
High-income earners also have the money to defend themselves with accountants, attorneys, and creative financial arrangements. People with less money are easier targets for tax collectors who want a low-friction payoff for their efforts.
"Syracuse University's Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) released data provided to it by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) on audits performed by the agency in fiscal year 2022," Reason's Liz Wolfe reported in January. "Despite the infusion of new funding earmarked for the IRS via last year's Inflation Reduction Act, the agency continued historic trends of hassling primarily low-income taxpayers, with relatively few millionaires and billionaires getting caught up in the audit sweep."
That's the reality of what the IRS does, as opposed to the vague and not-so-binding assurances officials make to the public about what they intend to do.
When it comes to taxes, promises are cheap. But the government's spending habits are extremely expensive, and that's what drives its appetite for revenue.
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"historic effort to restore fairness in tax compliance by shifting more attention onto high-income earners, partnerships, large corporations and promoters abusing the nation's tax laws," according to a September 8 IRS press release."
Every Biden trembles in fear?
Don’t count on
thatany promise from a politician.And yes, everyone should* fear the IRS, one of the most dangerous organizations known to man.
*you shouldn’t in a just world, but we live in America.
C'mon man. Get real. The Chinese are our friends - competitive friends maybe, but still friends. And thankfully, our borders are secure. And you should know our government wouldn't lie to us and that they always have our best interests at heart. No one should believe rumors about people having had medical care refused because they stubbornly and selfishly refused to be injected with
the clot shotthe miraculous, safe and effective new vaccine. You shouldn't fear that the IRS will target you for an audit if became known you were politically or financially supporting a cause that undermined pResident Brandon's vision for where the country needs to go. And you certainly should understand you will not draw the attention of state agencies like CPS or be put on the FBI terrorist watch list if you don't want your daughter Suzie pressed into showering with Dick after their unisex girls softball team practice, or if you protest your school providing puberty-blocking drugs along with a little estrogen to your 12 y/o son, Witless. (After all, he'd look so cute with long hair, makeup, little boobs and a micro-penis that never went through the Tanner stages of development.)Now if you will kindly excuse me, I need to go and take my government prescribed Lithium, SSRI, and benzodiazepine medications along with my second cup of coffee. In fact, I feel the need to double-dose my benzos this morning. My doctor at the government clinic told me I could double dose the benzos any time I wanted to.
What a phrase.
So the IRS will be going after small employers who fail to “Keep [and report] a daily tip record using Form 4070A, Employee’s Daily Record of Tips” and/or fail to “Report all tips on an individual income tax return, Form 4137, Social Security and Medicare Tax on Unreported Tip Income”. Wait staff earning cash tips cheat on their taxes to the tune of about $20-30B each year, and the IRS has been unhappy with their ability to go after these people due to lack of resources. 87,000 new agents will certainly give them some new resources.
I'm looking forward to seeing waitresses dragged from their places of employment by armed agents for failing to pay taxes on her cash tips. I hope they show on CNN the artist selling caricatures on the boardwalk for $20 cash get hauled away. Holding my breath until I can see the super-couponers who arbitrage their wares on Ebay get their doors kicked in. When the illegal aliens file their fraudulent EITC claims, I hope they are arrested and put under the jail for a few years before they get deported. When small business owners or anyone else cheat on their taxes, they cheat us all, so going after them full-bore is a positive action. If, somehow, they also manage to find some millionaires and billionaires who actually cheated on their taxes, why, that's a huge bonus too.
I hope all the waitresses remember who sicced the IRS on them.
That was back when Reason told us about another Biden tax plan...
A coming crackdown on $1.6 billion in unreported tips will continue the IRS' long and ugly history of targeting low-income Americans.
When President Joe Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act last year, the White House touted how the bill's $80 billion in new funding for the IRS would "make our tax code fairer by cracking down on millionaires, billionaires, and corporations that evade their obligations."
It now appears that some of those resources—and some of the coming crackdown on tax evasion—will, quite predictably, be aimed at individuals earning considerably less.
This week, the Treasury Department and IRS announced plans to overhaul existing programs that track tips earned by service sector workers. The new Service Industry Tip Compliance Agreement (SITCA) program will "take advantage of advancements in point-of-sale, time and attendance systems, and electronic payment settlement methods to improve tip reporting compliance," according to the IRS.
Even if you pay your tab with your credit card, pay the server who gave you good service with a cash tip handed directly from you to him/her/?it? (If he elects to report it and pay the taxes on it, that's up to him; likewise if he elects not to, that's also his decision.) The slip may have a blank for the tip - write in $0.00. If the place advises that they automatically add a service fee, have a glass of water and leave. (It's a little trouble, but do you or do you not want to protest?) If they don't advise or announce that a they have a service fee so that you have knowledge of it beforehand and they attempt to charge a service fee, mark it out and ignore it. Pay the menu price price for what you order, and make a point of refusing to pay more. If many people do this, trying to add a service fee or a built in tip will become more trouble than it's worth to most managers.
Likewise when employing craftsmen, especially for piecework or single day jobs, offer cash payment. What they do is not your problem unless your middle name is "Karen".
Now, don't get me wrong. Except for the fact that they represent 87,000 new government employee union members and thus basically a funnel of cash into Democrat campaign coffers (there's many good reasons, which her articulated well, why FDR opposed government employee unions even outside that particular complaint of mine), I am pleased that the IRS will work to close the tax gap.
I'm not foolish enough to believe that these new IRS agents (armed or not) will be limited to millionaires and billionaires, no matter what the Administration 'promises' and felt that pointing that out was necessary. I also doubt that they will only go after the guilty, because that's not how he auditing process works--they go after anyone with questionable returns, even if they are honest mistakes.
Given the proclivity of law enforcement to be, shall we say, overzealous?, too often when citizens question them, it is inevitable to me that someone will get killed over a math error on their 1040EZ (I again point out https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2014-12-04/law-puts-us-all-in-same-danger-as-eric-garner).
I also have to wonder if, given the likelihood of these new agents being Democrats, will they be able to be honest agents or will the temptation to follow Lois Lerner's example and target their political opposition using the force and power of their offices? It's happened before, it will probably happen again.
As this situation plays out and evolves, you may recall that some of the driving forces of the American Revolution was the perception that the taxes and tax collectors were unfair and the centralization of all powers. Thus we had the Boston Tea Party, and we had lines in the Declaration of Independence:
"He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people and eat out their substance.
"For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent:
"For suspending our own Legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever.
here's a saying (many variants) "The way you practice is the way you will play."
We've been told by Pres. Biden that the 87,000 new IRS agents will be sent after billionaires not paying their "fair share" (still no one has ever provided a definition for "fair share" that would apply to everyone in concrete terms--the usual mishmash received boils down to "I'd like to pay less, but other people should pay more".)
But the agents in the field are being trained to go after small businessmen who improperly deducted a work vehicle? Or, more specifically, as the video explains "Could not provide a source for the money used to purchase the vehicle". If that's what they're being trained for, that's what they are expected to be doing. See, they weren't being trained to approach a billionaire's megayacht and deal with the private security people and lawyers.
It's a fantasy to think that the new agents will be limited to targeting billionaires, or even millionaires. It's the same reason why all transactions (totaling) over $600 must be tracked and reported. People selling beanie babies on ebay will be reported to the IRS, and can expect to be audited. Those people are probably not millioniares or billionaires. Also, the $600 rules came with increased emphasis on unreported tip earnings.
What's the difference between "high-income" people and politicians and political appointees of The Looter Kleptocracy?
The politicians work for the "high-income" people.
The Nazi-Soldiers out doing what they do… TAKING from you whatever the [WE] mob wanted.
It’s a fault of not acknowledging what the USA was. It was founded on a Supreme Law to ensure Individual Liberty and Justice (Individualism NOT [WE] gangs of theft and Power-Hunger) for all. It wasn’t about Democratic [WE] mobs conquering and consuming the USA via [Na]tional So[zi]al[ism]. When Democrats went off on their proud ‘Socialist’ crusade everyone should’ve seen it EXACTLY for what it was. An attempt to overthrow the USA. Sadly; Too many criminal minds seems to exist amongst the population believing just because their ‘gun’ theft is granted by [WE] mob democracy that it’s all A-Okay.
It has literally destroyed the USA’S excellent, proud and successful history and it really is probably too late to fix. I wouldn’t be one bit surprised to see us entering into hyper-inflation and run an exact repeat of Venezuela. It would practically take a miracle to avoid with a debt of ($33T/130M working) = $253,846 on EACH-EVERY working person.
The primary reason hyperinflation won't happen is our trade deficit and the dollar being the currency for international trade. The recent inflation pattern shows that. When international trade basically stopped during the shutdowns the excess government spending staid in the US and caused inflation as more dollars chased fewer goods because of the supply chain break down.
"dollar being the currency for international trade"
Totally agree and also believe it would've gone belly-up years ago had the rest of the world not used it. The real scare now is the disaster when international trade abandons the USD or hyper-inflation is unavoidable in multiple nations.
Summary: A mostly global currency is harder to kill but kills more on it's way down.
>>IRS announced a new focus on squeezing “high-income earners” as part of a “historic effort to restore fairness in tax compliance.”
why would the 87000 freshly armed accountant-soldiers go after people who have no money?
The other 100,000 old accountant-soldiers took all the money so the new 87,000 will prosecute them for not having any left.
The IRS will go after people re-selling Taylor Swift tickets for a >$600 profit but it won't go after people stealing $900/day in California.
Is theft within the IRS' remit?
There are way more people earning less than $400,000 than those who earn more than $400,000. In other words it's the "normies" who cheat on taxes the most. If you get paid in cash, you don't pay the IRS a thing unless someone rats out the employer.
What would be the reaction if Biden said "I'll approve of increased federal spending on police around black neighborhoods, because that's where the crime is"? Tremendous fury, even from the usually fawning MSM?
Why should be some random guy who makes $412,000 be more at risk of being audited? What if he had no record of cheating on taxes? Because he happens to work in an industry that's known to cheat?
Maybe it's already common for the IRS to target high income earners. I'm not a fan of that kind of enforcement.
At least we can hope it will shut up all the "I made $10,000 last week" guys.
Meh. So we should praise tax cheats sticking it to the man? Maybe the pain will help change minds and revolt against the endless expansion and appetite.
The 200,000,000 citizens who live off of Daddy-Gov will never worry about 'tax cheats' because they don't EARN a d*mn thing to take they just take it all.
IRS Targeting More Supposedly 'High-Income' Americans Than Advertised
Who didn't see that coming?
That's fine, but pay your taxes!